PNG tightens COVID-19 restrictions as aid agency warns Australian help may be too little, too late

Papua New Guinea will bar mass gatherings, close schools and may order burials in a "designated mass grave" as coronavirus cases continue to rise.

A Port Moresby testing centre

A COVID-19 testing centre in Port Moresby. Source: PNG National Department of Health/Facebook

International help is not coming fast enough to avert a coronavirus disaster in Papua New Guinea, an aid agency has warned, as the country confronts a steep rise in infections.  

Authorities in the Pacific island nation of nine million people said on Friday they will tighten internal border controls, restrict personal movement and enforce mask wearing in public from next week. 

They will also ban mass gatherings, close schools and may order burials in a "designated mass grave" as part of sweeping measures to slow the spread of COVID-19.
PNG has recorded a spike in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks, with hundreds of new daily cases. Total cases stand at 2,658 and deaths at 36, but health experts believe the true numbers are likely much higher.

Australia , and asked the European Union to release one million doses of its supply, as local media reported patients being turned away from overrun hospitals.

New Zealand also said on Friday it was sending PNG enough personal protective equipment kits to treat 1,000 COVID-19 cases.
But with record infections already forcing major hospitals to close or operate at reduced capacity, an aid agency says the Australian delivery might be too little, too late. 

"The outbreak in PNG is rapidly escalating, with hospitals and clinics overwhelmed and many health workers already infected," Medecins Sans Frontieres Australia director Jennifer Tierney said. 

"What's needed is a bigger response, now, before the situation gets out of control. 

"Papua New Guinea needed these vaccines yesterday."

The social distancing measures being imposed from Monday will remain in force until the end of the declaration of the pandemic, unless revoked earlier by officials, PNG pandemic response controller David Manning said in a statement.

"Authorised officers" would be tasked with enforcing compliance and anybody found breaching the rules could be penalised, the statement added, without providing further detail.
Though far-reaching, the measures do not go as far as the strict stay-home orders and border closures imposed over the past year in parts of Australia, where local transmission has been all but eliminated.

The PNG ban on public gatherings of more than 10 people includes exemptions for religious gatherings of up to 50 if worshippers follow social distancing requirements. Shops can open 13 hours a day and restaurants 15 hours.

Domestic flights are allowed if travellers undertake temperature checks and produce a negative COVID-19 test result. Travel between the country's 22 provinces can continue for purposes like essential business, healthcare and returning home.

State-owned Ok Tedi Mining Ltd on Friday began a two-week suspension at its copper mine in the Western Province, the area hardest hit outside the capital Port Moresby.

The Australian government earlier this week suspended travel exemptions which had allowed fly-in-fly-out (FIFO) mining and energy workers to travel between the two countries.


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3 min read
Published 19 March 2021 8:42pm
Updated 19 March 2021 9:41pm
Source: AAP, AFP, SBS



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